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Ig Nobel Prize Ceremony Tonight

Ellen Spertus writes "The Eleventh First Annual Ig Nobel Prize Ceremony will be held in Cambridge, MA, on Thursday, Oct. 4, to honor scientific achievements that cannot, or should not, be reproduced. The ceremony, which will be webcast live and broadcast later on Science Friday, is sponsored by The Annals of Improbable Research. The accompanying Ig Informal Lectures will be held Saturday, Oct. 6, at MIT."

6 of 73 comments (clear)

  1. Similar prize for software? by smaughster · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I think that initiatives like the Darwin award and the Ig Nobel prize are great. Maybe it would be a good idea to introduce such a prize for software that is too faulty or insanely difficult to use, or code that is too unreadable. Ermz, I am preaching for the wrong choir here, since some people actually like making unreadable code :)

    --
    I intend to live forever, so far so good.
    1. Re:Similar prize for software? by smaughster · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The point of IG Nobel prizes is that it is about (academic) research which has no use. I was thinking more of a prize for stuff that is too hard to use (but could have a use anyway).

      Some of the past results would have made great slashdot stories, how about: Charl Fourie and Michelle Wong of Johannesburg, South Africa, for
      inventing an automobile burglar alarm consisting of a detection circuit and a flamethrower."

      --
      I intend to live forever, so far so good.
    2. Re:Similar prize for software? by DoctorNathaniel · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Nah.. wouldn't work. It would be indistiguishable from coroprate self-back-patting.

      The thing is, science works by a method of peer review and community respect: your collegues know you do good work because they read it. Software, on the other hand, is not judged at all...

      .. except in the Open Source world. Still, I don't think this would work: software either suceeds or fails; the best Open Source stuff simply does it's job well.. it doesn't discover new things.

      But all this misses the point. First you need a good name for the prize/magazine. I preferred the 'Journal of Irreproducable Results' to AIR, but that's just me.

    3. Re:Similar prize for software? by mav[LAG] · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Some of the past results would have made great slashdot stories, how about: Charl Fourie and Michelle Wong of Johannesburg, South Africa, for
      inventing an automobile burglar alarm consisting of a detection circuit and a flamethrower."


      Far from being a whacky burglar alarm, the device you mention was originally actually an anti-hijack device. Johannesburg is the carjacking capital of the world. I have been resident here for over ten years and I can truthfully say that if you yourself haven't been hijacked then a member of your family or a friend has if you live in this town. I personally have had two attacks in my own driveway, my wife was the victim of an attempt and my father was hijacked and then kidnapped for over four hours.

      Most carjack attempts happen at traffic lights or outside your home. The robbers' modus operandi is to walk up to your car door brandishing a weapon - normally a 9mm or an AK-47. Sometimes they just shoot first, drag your body out the way and dump it before driving off. It's impractical to reach for a weapon yourself in these situations since a) you're sitting down and b) your seatbelt is often in the way.

      Solution: press a button (the original method of activation) and your would-be murderers get themselves horribly crisped by a sheet of burning hydrocarbons. Sounds damn good to me.

      --
      --- Hot Shot City is particularly good.
  2. Levitating Frog by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Last Years Awards Kicked Ass

    By Far any away the coolest thing is the levitating frog,

    Check out the MPegs and Science behind it, fsuking amazing and something I never thouhgt id see

    ---Any sufficiently advanced motorbike is indistingasble from magic--

  3. Noise ratio. by IncarnationTwo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The good thing about the internet is that anyone could build up a site with this kind of contest. And the bad side of the internet is that anyone can build up a site with this kind of contest.

    Or in other words. I would otherwise greatly encourage, for example you to put ut such a contest, but the fact seems to be (at least to me) that the web is filled with such contests of small communities and groups.

    Then again, should you (or anyone) somehow gain a larger community behind such endeavour, and get some outside funding from advertisers or sponsors, then your idea might be worthwhile, or even good. So if you can get these two, and create some working nomination/moderation system for nominees it would sound a great project, but without them you will be having hard time and need lots of will to build such contest. You can note that these fellows have been doing this for a decade now, and had a community at the beginning to start with.

    --
    In dream society, people could be given the ability to mod replies. In real life, it would be disaster.